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Evidence for induction of oxidative stress caused by chronic exposure of Chinese residents to arsenic contained in drinking water. (Articles).


Exposure of experimental animals or cultured cells to arsenic induces oxidative stress oxidative stress,
n an imbalance of the prooxidant antioxidant ratio in which too few antioxidants are produced or ingested or too many oxidizing agents are produced.
, but, to date, no examination of this phenomenon in humans has been reported. In this study we conducted a cross-sectional study cross-sectional study
n.
See synchronic study.


cross-sectional study,
n the scientific method for the analysis of data gathered from two or more samples at one point in time.
 in Wuyuan, Inner Mongolia, China, to explore the relationship between chronic arsenic exposure from drinking water drinking water

supply of water available to animals for drinking supplied via nipples, in troughs, dams, ponds and larger natural water sources; an insufficient supply leads to dehydration; it can be the source of infection, e.g. leptospirosis, salmonellosis, or of poisoning, e.g.
 and oxidative stress in humans. Thirty-three inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
 who had been drinking tube-well water with high concentrations of inorganic arsenic (mean value = 0.41 mg/L) for about 18 years constituted the high-exposure group, and 10 residents who lived nearby but were exposed to much lower concentrations of arsenic in their drinking water (mean value = 0.02 mg/L) were selected as the low-exposure comparison group. Results of the present study indicated that although the activity for superoxide dismutase (SOD) in blood did not differ significantly between the two groups, the mean serum level of lipid peroxides (LPO LPO London Philharmonic Orchestra
LPO Legal Process Outsourcing
LPO Local Purchase Order
LPO Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra
LPO Legal Process Offshoring
LPO Leading Petty Officer
LPO Loan Production Office
LPO Lattice Preferred Orientation
) was significantly higher among the high-exposed compared with the low-exposed group. Elevated serum LPO concentrations were correlated with blood levels of inorganic arsenic and its methylated meth·yl·ate  
n.
An organic compound in which the hydrogen of the hydroxyl group of methyl alcohol is replaced by a metal.

tr.v. meth·yl·at·ed, meth·yl·at·ing, meth·yl·ates
1.
 metabolites Metabolites
Substances produced by metabolism or by a metabolic process.

Mentioned in: Interactions
. In addition, they showed an inverse correlation with nonprotein sulfhydryl (NPSH NPSH Net Positive Suction Head
NPSH National Pipe Straight Hose (garden hose thread) 
) levels in whole blood. The subjects in the high-arsenic-exposure group had mean blood NPSH levels 57.6% lower than those in the low-exposure group. Blood NPSH levels were inversely correlated with the concentrations of inorganic arsenic and its methylated metabolites in blood and with the ratio of monomethylarsenic to inorganic arsenic. These results provide evidence that chronic exposure to arsenic from drinking water in humans results in induction of oxidative stress, as indicated by the reduction in NPSH and the increase in LPO. Some possible mechanisms for the arsenic-induced oxidative stress are discussed. Key words: arsenic, chronic arsenic poisoning, drinking water, glutathione glutathione: see coenzyme. , human, lipid peroxidation, methylation methylation,
n a phase-II detoxification pathway in the liver; methyl groups combine with toxins to rid the body of various substances.

methylation
(meth´
, nonprotein sulfhydryl, oxidative stress. Environ Health Perspect 110:331-336 (2002). [Online 28 February 2002]

http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2002/110p331-336pi/abstract.html

**********

Arsenic is widely distributed in nature and is mainly transported in the environment by water (1). Chronic exposure of humans to high concentrations of arsenic in drinking water is associated with skin lesions (2,3), peripheral vascular disease Peripheral Vascular Disease Definition

Peripheral vascular disease is a narrowing of blood vessels that restricts blood flow. It mostly occurs in the legs, but is sometimes seen in the arms.
 (4), hypertension (5), blackfoot disease (2,6), and a high risk of cancers (2,7). Inorganic arsenic (iAs) predominantly exists in two oxidation states naturally: trivalent trivalent /tri·va·lent/ (tri-va´lent) having a valence of three.

tri·va·lent
adj.
Having valence 3.



tri·va
 arsenite [iAs(III)] and pentavalent pentavalent

having a valence of five.


pentavalent antimony compounds
see antimony.

pentavalent organic arsenicals
includes the pharmaceuticals arsanilic acid, roxarsone, nitarsone. See also organic arsenical.
 arsenate ar·se·nate
n.
A salt of arsenic acid.



arsenate

an uncommon garden pesticide, as lead arsenate, or as antifungal spray on fruit trees or cattle tick dip as sodium arsenate.
 [iAs(V)]. It is generally recognized that the toxicity of iAs(III) is a result of its ability to bind with sulfhydryl (SH) groups, especially vicinal vic·i·nal  
adj.
1. Of, belonging to, or restricted to a limited area or neighborhood; local.

2. Relating to or being a local road.

3.
 thiols in proteins, resulting in the dysfunction of enzyme activity (8), and the toxicity of iAs(V) is a result of its ability to substitute phosphate in enzyme-catalyzed reactions, where it can disrupt normal functions of the enzymes (9,10). It is well known that animal models are not a good predictor of human carcinogenesis car·ci·no·gen·e·sis
n.
The production of cancer.



carcinogenesis

production of cancer.


biological carcinogenesis
viruses and some parasites are capable of initiating neoplasia.
 for arsenic, suggesting that the mechanisms for metabolism and toxicity of arsenic in humans differ from those in animals. Recent studies suggest that arsenic also exerts its toxicity through the generation of reactive oxygen species reactive oxygen species,
n molecules and ions of oxygen that have an unpaired electron, thus rendering them extremely reactive. Many cellular structures are susceptible to attack by ROS contributing to cancer, heart disease, and cerebrovascular disease.
 (ROS ROS,
n.pr See reactive oxygen species.
) (11-14), which include hydrogen peroxide and other chemical forms known as free radicals (e.g., superoxide superoxide /su·per·ox·ide/ (-ok´sid) any compound containing the highly reactive and extremely toxic oxygen radical O2-, a common intermediate in numerous biological oxidations.

su·per·ox·ide
n.
 *[O.sub.2.sup.-], hydroxyl hydroxyl /hy·drox·yl/ (hi-drok´sil) the univalent radical OH.

hy·drox·yl
n.
The univalent radical or group OH, a characteristic component of bases, certain acids, phenols, alcohols, carboxylic
 OH*, and peroxyl ROO roo
Noun

pl roos Austral informal a kangaroo
* radicals) (15). iAs(III) has been shown to enhance the production of heme oxygenase, an indicator of oxidative stress (11), and to increase intracellular peroxide levels in vitro (12,16). Acute and chronic intake of arsenic increased lipid peroxides (LPO) in blood, liver, kidney, and other organs of rats (13,14). However, no information has been available on the relationship between oxidative stress and chronic exposure of humans to arsenic contained in drinking water.

In biological systems, a number of antioxidant antioxidant, substance that prevents or slows the breakdown of another substance by oxygen. Synthetic and natural antioxidants are used to slow the deterioration of gasoline and rubber, and such antioxidants as vitamin C (ascorbic acid), butylated hydroxytoluene  defense systems, including enzymatic and nonezymatic routes, operate to control excessive levels of ROS (15). Superoxide dismutase (SOD), an antioxidase catalyzing the dismutation of *[O.sub.2.sup.-] into hydrogen peroxide and [O.sub.2], is thought to be essential for the protection of cells against ROS and is used experimentally and clinically as an antioxidant drug (17). SOD has been shown to effectively reduce the frequency of arsenite-induced sister chromatid exchanges in human peripheral lymphocytes (18) and XRS-5 X-ray sensitive cells (19). Glutathione (GSH GSH reduced glutathione.

GSH

reduced glutathione.
), the most abundant nonprotein sulfhydryl (NPSH) in most cells, acts as a nucleophilic scavenger of numerous compounds and their metabolites via enzymatic and chemical mechanisms and plays important roles in the protection against oxidative damage caused by ROS (20-22). GSH can react nonenzymatically with ROS or can act as a substrate in the GSH peroxidase-mediated destruction of hydroperoxides (22). GSH depletion can impair a cell's defense against the toxic actions of many compounds and may lead to cell injury and death (21,22). Cellular toxicity of arsenic was found to be inversely related to intracellular GSH levels and thus may be enhanced by GSH depletion (23). Acute administration of arsenic to rats produced a significant reduction in hepatic GSH (24). Chronic exposure of rats or mice to arsenic via injections caused up to 35% depletion in hepatic GSH, along with liver injury (13,25).

The purpose of this study was to investigate whether prolonged ingestion ingestion /in·ges·tion/ (-chun) the taking of food, drugs, etc., into the body by mouth.

in·ges·tion
n.
1. The act of taking food and drink into the body by the mouth.

2.
 of arsenic contained in drinking water can cause oxidative stress in humans by comparing serum levels of LPO between the high- and low-arsenic-exposed subjects. We also sought to elucidate the possible underlying mechanisms of the oxidative stress induced by arsenic.

Materials and Methods

Study participants. The present study was carried out in three villages of Wuyuan, a town in the southwestern area of Inner Mongolia, China, where the drinking water supply system has been dependent on tube wells with a depth of about 15 m. Thirty-three volunteer residents (mean age, 42.4 [+ or -] 13 years; range, 13-73 years; 21 male and 12 female) from 11 families who lived in the villages of Yindingtu and Shiba, Wuyuan, were selected as high-arsenic-exposed subjects. The tube-well water consumed by this group contained high concentrations of arsenic (0.41 [+ or -] 0.11 mg/L, mean [+ or -] SD). Ten residents from five families who lived in the village of Shahe, Wuyuan, located 35 kilometers from Yindingtu and Shiba and with drinking water containing lower arsenic levels (0.02 [+ or -] 0.01 mg/L, mean [+ or -] SD), were recruited as control subjects (mean age, 37.3 [+ or -] 16.4 years; range, 23-68 years; 5 male and 5 female). All of the subjects who were selected in the high- and low-arsenic-exposed groups are of the Han nationality. Mean duration of tube-well water consumption for the high- and low-arsenic-exposed groups was similar (about 18 years). Two trained doctors administered a questionnaire during an in-person interview and obtained information about lifetime drinking sources, medical history, alcohol consumption, cigarette smoking, and dietary habits. Two trained dermatologists blinded with respect to arsenic exposure status conducted detailed physical examinations. All the subjects who participated in the study provided informed consent.

Fasting peripheral venous blood was drawn from the study participants, and the levels of NPSH and SOD activity in blood were determined immediately. Serum was separated immediately from 1.5 mL of blood and transferred on dry ice to China Medical University for the measurement of LPO. In addition, 1.5 mL of each whole blood sample was transferred on dry ice to St. Marianna University School of Medicine in Japan for arsenic measurements. The blood samples of all study subjects were tested simultaneously. Water samples were taken directly from the tube wells and preserved at room temperature before determination of arsenic concentrations.

Arsenic analysis. Quantitation of total arsenic (tAs) in water and iAs, monomethylarsenic (MMeAs), and dimethylarsenic (DMeAs) in blood, urine, and hair was performed as reported previously (26). Briefly, 0.25 g of hair or 0.5 mL of each other sample was transferred into a 10 mL polymethylpentene test tube, and after the addition of 2 mL 2M sodium hydroxide to the sample, the mixture was heated at 95 [degrees] C for 3 hr. The assay sample was stirred with a magnetic stirrer once every 30 min. The treated sample was diluted to make 10 mL, and an aliquot aliquot (al-ee-kwoh) adj. a definite fractional share, usually applied when dividing and distributing a dead person's estate or trust assets. (See: share)  sample was used for each assay. iAs and methylated arsenic compounds do not undergo changes in chemical species (e.g., distribution of methyl groups) even when heated in 2M NaOH (26). iAs, MMeAs, and DMeAs were determined by atomic absorption spectrophotometry spectrophotometry

Branch of spectroscopy dealing with measurement of radiant energy transmitted or reflected by a body as a function of wavelength. The measurement is usually compared to that transmitted or reflected by a system that serves as a standard.
 (Shimadzu model AA-6103; Shimadzu, Kyoto, Japan). Using this method, the detection limit of each of the three chemical species of arsenic was 1 ng, and the coefficient of variation Coefficient of Variation

A measure of investment risk that defines risk as the standard deviation per unit of expected return.
 was < 5%. The standard reference material used was oyster tissue (No. 1566) from the National Bureau of Standards National Bureau of Standards: see National Institute of Standards and Technology.

National Bureau of Standards - National Institute of Standards and Technology
 (NBS (National Bureau of Standards) See NIST.

NBS - National Bureau of Standards: part of the US Department of Commerce, now NIST.
, Washington, DC, USA). Because of limited seafood ingestion, no trimethylarsenic was detected in the blood or urine samples of any subjects.

Assay of serum LPO. Serum LPO was determined by measuring the thiobarbiturate-reactive substances (TBA-RS) by the method of Yagi ya·gi  
n. pl. ya·gis
A directional radio and television antenna consisting of a horizontal conductor with several insulated dipoles parallel to and in the plane of the conductor.
 et al (27). Briefly, serum (300 [micro]L) was mixed with 20% trichloroacetic acid (2,700 [micro]L) and 0.67% thiobarbituric acid (1,000 [micro]L) and then incubated at 100 [degrees] C for 30 min. After cooling with tap water, the resulting chromogen chromogen /chro·mo·gen/ (kro´mah-jen) any substance giving origin to a coloring matter.

chro·mo·gen
n.
1. A substance that lacks definite color but may be transformed into a pigment.
 was extracted with n-butyl alcohol (4,000 [micro]L) by vigorous shaking. The mixtures were then centrifuged at 3,000 rpm for 10 min, and the supernatants obtained were monitored at a wavelength of 535 nm by a Shimazu spectrophotometer spectrophotometer, instrument for measuring and comparing the intensities of common spectral lines in the spectra of two different sources of light. See photometry; spectroscope; spectrum.  (UV-1600; Shimadzu). 1,1,3,3-Tetraethoxy-propane was used as the external standard, and the concentration of LPO was expressed as nanomoles of malondialdehyde equivalents.

Determination of NPSH in whole blood. We determined whole-blood NPSH levels using 5,5'-dithiobis-2-nitrobenzoic acid and measured the absorbance absorbance /ab·sor·bance/ (-sor´bans)
1. in analytical chemistry, a measure of the light that a solution does not transmit compared to a pure solution. Symbol .

2.
 at 412 nm according to the method of Ellman (28). Briefly, whole blood (100 [micro]L was diluted with 0.4 mL of cold double-distilled water (DDW DDW Digestive Disease Week
DDW Diseases of the Developing World
DDW Dimensional Data Warehouse
DDW Digital Data Warfare
DDW Darkness Does Wonders (bar slang)
DDW Data Driven Workflow
), and 0.5 mL of 10% trichloroacetic acid was added to precipitate the protein. The sample was mixed well and centrifuged at 15,000 rpm for 5 min. The supernatant supernatant /su·per·na·tant/ (-na´tant) the liquid lying above a layer of precipitated insoluble material.

supernatant

the liquid lying above a layer of precipitated insoluble material.
 was used for the determination.

Determination of SOD activity in whole blood. Whole blood (50 [micro]L) was washed with 5 mL saline and centrifuged at 2,000 rpm for 3 min. The rinsed cells were diluted with cold DDW to make a final volume of 0.2 mL. Ethanol (0.1 mL) and chloroform chloroform (klôr`əfôrm) or trichloromethane (trī'klôrōmĕth`ān), CHCl3  (0.1 mL) were mixed with the erythrocyte erythrocyte (ĭrĭth`rəsīt'): see blood.
erythrocyte
 or red blood cell or red blood corpuscle

Blood cell that carries oxygen from the lungs to the body tissues.
 lysis lysis /ly·sis/ (li´sis)
1. destruction or decomposition, as of a cell or other substance, under influence of a specific agent.

2. mobilization of an organ by division of restraining adhesions.

3.
 to precipitate the hemoglobin. The tubes were shaken vigorously for 15 min and centrifuged at 4,000 rpm for 3 min. The water-ethanol layer was used to determine SOD activity according to the method of Elstner and Heupel (29).

Data analysis. We used SPSS A statistical package from SPSS, Inc., Chicago (www.spss.com) that runs on PCs, most mainframes and minis and is used extensively in marketing research. It provides over 50 statistical processes, including regression analysis, correlation and analysis of variance.  software (version 6.0; SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) to determine statistical significance for the differences of LPO, NPSH, SOD, and arsenic levels between the high- and low-arsenic-exposed groups by independent-sample t-test. All p values are two tailed.

Results

The concentrations of arsenic in well water used by the study subjects and the prevalence of the main clinical manifestations were described previously (30,31). Table 1 shows that the mean blood concentrations of iAs, MMeAs, and DMeAs of the high-arsenic-exposed group were about 3.0, 9.9, and 5.1 times higher, respectively, than those of the low-arsenic-exposed group, and the urinary levels of iAs, MMeAs, and DMeAs of the high-arsenic-exposed group were about 5.1, 11.7, and 10.3 times higher than those of the low-arsenic-exposed controls. Although our analytic method did not separate MMeAs(V) and MMeAs(III), the total MMeAs in blood (49.2%) was markedly higher than iAs (19.4%) and DMeAs (31.4%). In contrast, DMeAs was the most abundant metabolite metabolite, organic compound that is a starting material in, an intermediate in, or an end product of metabolism. Starting materials are substances, usually small and of simple structure, absorbed by the organism as food.  in urine (65.3%). The total arsenic in hair of the high-arsenic-exposed group was 4.5 times higher than that of the low-arsenic-exposed group.

Table 2 shows that the mean serum LPO level of the high-arsenic-exposed group was significantly higher than that of low-arsenic-exposed controls; conversely, the mean NPSH level in whole blood of the high-arsenic-exposed subjects was only 57.3% of low-arsenic-exposed controls. However, the SOD activity in whole blood showed no significant difference between the high- and low-arsenic-exposed subjects.

As shown in Figure 1, the serum LPO levels were significantly correlated with the concentrations of iAs, MMeAs, DMeAs, and total arsenic in blood. In addition, an inverse correlation of serum LPO concentrations with NPSH levels in whole blood was observed, but no correlation was found between serum LPO concentrations and the SOD activities in whole blood (Figure 2). Figure 3 shows that the NPSH levels in whole blood were correlated with blood concentrations of iAs, MMeAs, DMeAs, and total arsenic. In addition, the concentrations of whole-blood NPSH were significantly correlated with the ratio of MMeAs to iAs in blood, which reflects the extent of the first methylation of iAs in the body (Figure 4), but were not correlated with the ratio of DMeAs to MMeAs in urine, which reflects the extent of the second methylation of MMeAs in the body (p = 0.69; data not shown).

[FIGURES 1-4 OMITTED]

Discussion

Recently, some areas with chronic arsenic poisoning were found in Inner Mongolia, China, where underground water was the only source of water supply and was commonly obtained from tube wells of about 15-30 m in depth. The water sources in some villages in our study area of Wuyuan were contaminated with naturally occurring arsenic. The mean arsenic concentration in tube-well water from Yindingtu and Shiba, two of the seriously contaminated villages in Wuyuan, was 0.41 mg/L, which is about 8.2 and 41 times higher than the limit set for drinking water in China (0.0.5 mg/L) and the present World Health Organization drinking water guideline value (0.01 mg/L) (32), respectively. The mean level in the control village of Shahe was 0.02 mg/L. Because the groundwater was not used for irrigation irrigation, in agriculture, artificial watering of the land. Although used chiefly in regions with annual rainfall of less than 20 in. (51 cm), it is also used in wetter areas to grow certain crops, e.g., rice.  and the surface soil contained minimal levels of arsenic, arsenic concentrations in wheat, the main farm crop, grown in both the high-and low-exposure areas were similar (0.029 vs. 0.024 [micro]g/g, respectively; n = 5). Hence, we can conclude that the ingestion of tube-well water was the main exposure source of arsenic in our study subjects. The main clinical manifestations of the exposed subjects were similar to those found in other arsenic poisoning areas of the world (2,3,33), mainly including cutaneous cutaneous /cu·ta·ne·ous/ (ku-ta´ne-us) pertaining to the skin.

cu·ta·ne·ous
adj.
Of, relating to, or affecting the skin.


Cutaneous
Pertaining to the skin.
 depigmentation de·pig·men·ta·tion
n.
The loss or removal of normal pigmentation.



depigmentation

removal of pigment; usually refers to melanin. See also hypopigmentation.
, hyperpigmentation Hyperpigmentation Definition

Hyperpigmentation is the increase in the natural color of the skin.
Description

Melanin, a brown pigment manufactured by certain cells in the skin called melanocytes, is responsible for skin color.
, and hyperkeratosis hyperkeratosis /hy·per·ker·a·to·sis/ (-ker?ah-to´sis)
1. hypertrophy of the stratum corneum of the skin, or any disease so characterized.

2. hypertrophy of the cornea.
 and increased incidence of peripheral vascular disorder, peripheral neuropathy, and liver swelling (30,31). Both blood and urine levels of iAs, MMeAs, and DMeAs were significantly higher in the high-exposure group compared with the low-exposure controls. The proportions of the three metabolites in blood and urine were different: MMeAs was the main metabolite in blood (49.2%), whereas DMeAs was the major metabolite in urine (65.3%). This difference suggests that part of the MMeAs in blood was methylated into DMeAs before being excreted in the urine.

The present study showed that subjects chronically exposed to arsenic-contaminated drinking water in Wuyuan, Inner Mongolia, had increased serum levels of LPO. This may be a result of either overproduction o·ver·pro·duce  
tr.v. o·ver·pro·duced, o·ver·pro·duc·ing, o·ver·pro·duc·es
To produce in excess of need or demand.



o
 of ROS or accumulation of ROS resulting from dysfunction of antioxidases/antioxidants during chronic arsenic exposure. Previous works suggested that the toxicity of arsenic compounds may be mediated by ROS generated during the metabolism of arsenic compounds (16,34). Genotoxicity Genotoxic substances are a type of carcinogen, specifically those capable of causing genetic mutation and of contributing to the development of tumors. This includes both certain chemical compounds and certain types of radiation.  of arsenite (35) and arsenic-induced apoptosis in NIH3T3 cells (36), NB4 cells (37), and Chinese hamster ovary cells (16) were triggered by the generation of [H.sub.2][O.sub.2]. *[O.sub.2.sup.-] and [H.sub.2][O.sub.2] were produced by endothelial cells exposed to low levels of arsenite (38). DMeAs, a metabolite of iAs, induced DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 damage via formation of *[O.sub.2.sup.-] and dimethylarsenic peroxyl radical (39,40). 8-Hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OhdG), one of the major ROS-induced DNA base-modified products, was detected in the skin of patients with arsenic-related Bowen's disease (41) and in the liver of rats administered DMeAs (42). Our recent data (43) from animal experiments revealed that .[O.sub.2.sup.-], which was identified as a Tiron-reactive signal (Dojindo Lab., Kumamoto, Japan), was generated in intact aortic aortic

pertaining to or emanating from the aorta. See also aortic arch.


aortic aneurysm
occurs most often in dogs, where it is caused by Spirocerca lupi larvae, turkeys and primates, causing dyspnea, cyanosis and coughing.
 rings from rabbits chronically exposed to 5 mg/L of arsenate in drinking water for 18 weeks. Also, the levels of [H.sub.2][O.sub.2] in urine were significantly higher in the arsenate-exposed rabbits than in controls. In the present study, serum LPO concentrations were significantly correlated with blood levels of arsenic and irs metabolites, indicating that the overproduction of ROS induced by chronic arsenic exposure was one of the main causes of the elevation of serum LPO observed in the high-arsenic-exposed subjects.

Arsenic has been reported to produce *[O.sub.2]- and [H.sub.2][O.sub.2] in endothelial cells (38,43). It is well recognized that SOD can be up-regulated by overproduction of ROS, and the lack of expression in SOD knock-out experimental animals results in oxidative stress (44). SOD can effectively reduce the frequency of arsenite-induced sister chromatid exchanges in cells (18,19), suggesting that this antioxidant enzyme contributes to the oxidative stress-dependent toxicity caused by arsenic. In the present study, however, the SOD activity was not significantly altered by chronic arsenic exposure. The serum LPO levels were not correlated with the SOD activities in whole blood. This suggests that the increased LPO level observed in the high-arsenic-exposed group was not associated with the SOD activity in the subjects. The strong inverse correlation between NPSH and LPO levels suggests that the depletion of NPSH was another possible cause of the lipid peroxidation observed in the arsenic-exposed group. Conversely, the overproduction of ROS could cause the depletion of NPSH.

One of the mechanisms by which arsenicals produce toxic effects is through their interaction with cellular sulfhydryl groups in proteins or elsewhere (45). iAs(III) and iAs(V) have been shown to react with some NPSH to form As-SH complexes in vitro at high concentrations (46,47). However, our preliminary examination showed that sulfhydryl groups of dithiols were readily oxidized oxidized

having been modified by the process of oxidation.


oxidized cellulose
see absorbable cellulose.
 by incubation with iAs(III) but not iAs(V), MMeAs(V), or DMeAs(V), whereas monothiols were unaffected by all the arsenicals (48). In addition, the concentrations of arsenic in blood of the high-arsenic-exposed subjects were at the micromolar level, which is low compared with the level of NPSH in blood, suggesting that direct binding was not the main cause of NPSH depletion in blood. The depletion was significantly correlated with the ratio of MMeAs to iAs in blood, indicating that the first methylation of iAs would tend to deplete de·plete
v.
1. To use up something, such as a nutrient.

2. To empty something out, as the body of electrolytes.
 available NPSH. GSH or other NPSHs, such as L-cysteine, plays critical roles in the reduction of As(V) to As(III) in blood and in the methylation reaction of iAs in liver (49,50).

Present results suggest that the two main causes of NPSH depletion were oxidative reaction with overproduced ROS and the arsenic methylation process. However, because GSH is almost always present in all cells at high concentrations (generally millimolar) (22), the two mechanisms alone do not seem to explain the striking depletion of NPSH in blood. We have reported previously that chronic exposure to arsenic in drinking water results in decreased nitric oxide production in humans (30), and inhibition of NO synthesis leads to a marked decrease in GSH synthesis through downregulation of the rate-limiting enzyme [gamma]-glutamylcysteine synthetase synthetase /syn·the·tase/ (-the-tas) a term used in the names of some of the ligases, no longer favored because of its similarity to synthase and its emphasis on reaction products.

syn·the·tase
n.
 ([gamma]-GCS) in vitro and in vivo (51,52). NO itself up-regulates [gamma]-GCS and increases GSH concentration (53). Our recent work showed that levels of serum NO metabolites correlated positively with whole-blood NPSH levels (30). Therefore, the observed GSH depletion may be at least in part due to the decreased NO synthesis caused by chronic arsenic exposure through down-regulation of [gamma]-GCS.

Furthermore, the oxidation-reduction cycling of GSH is also central to the cellular response to oxidative stress. The balance between the oxidation of GSH to glutathione disulfide (GSSG GSSG oxidized glutathione.

GSSG

oxidized glutathione.
) and the rapid reduction of GSSG by GSH reductase reductase /re·duc·tase/ (-tas) a term used in the names of some of the oxidoreductases, usually specifically those catalyzing reactions important solely for reduction of a metabolite.  contributes to the maintenance of a cellular GSH:GSSG ratio of about 300:1 (54,55). Inhibition of GSH reductase diminishes the intracellular level of GSH. Styblo et al. (56,57) demonstrated that arsenicals and arsenothiols, especially methylated trivalent arsenicals and arsenothiols, were potent inhibitors of the reduction of GSSG by GSH reductase. The inhibition constants for the di([gamma]-glutamylcyteinylglycinyl) methyldithioarsonite and dicysteinylmethyldithioarsenite, two possible intermediates of iAs metabolism in vivo, were 0.009 and 0.018 mM, respectively (56,57). Either the trivalent organoarsenicals generated during biomethylation of arsenic or the arsenothiols formed in the cell by reaction with NPSH could alter the cellular GSH:GSSG ratio, decreasing the GSH level by the inhibition of GSH reductase. Recently, the concentrations of MMeAs(III) and MMeAs(V) in hamster liver after a single intraperitoneal dose of iAs(V) (2 mg As/kg of body weight) were 38.5 and 31.4 ng/g, respectively (MMeAs(III)/total MMeAs = 55.1%) (58). Although the method we used for determining blood arsenic in the present study could not separate MMeAs(III) and MMeAs(V), high levels of total MMeAs (49.2%) were observed in blood, suggesting the possibility that high levels of MMeAs(III) existed in other organs. Interestingly, MMeAs(III) has been detected in urine after the administration of sodium 2,3-dimercapto-1-propane sulfonate sul·fo·nate
n.
A salt or ester of sulfonic acid.

v.
1. To introduce one or more sulfonic acid groups into an organic compound.

2. To treat with sulfonic acid.
 to humans chronically exposed to inorganic arsenic in the drinking water in Inner Mongolia (59).

In summary (Figure 5), our data provide evidence that chronic exposure to arsenic from drinking water in humans results in induction of oxidative stress, as indicated by the increase of serum LPO. The oxidative stress induced by chronic arsenic exposure was associated with high levels of iAs and its methylated metabolites in blood, as well as with NPSH depletion caused by iAs and its methylated metabolites via different mechanisms.

[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]
Table 1. Levels (mean [+ or -] SD) of iAs, MMeAs, and DMeAs in blood
and urine and total arsenic in hair of the high- and
low-arsenic-exposed subjects.

                      Blood ([micro]g/L)

Group (n)         iAs                   MMeAs

High (43)   8.2 [+ or -] 3.4 *   20.7 [+ or -] 7.9 *
Low (10)    2.7 [+ or -] 0.9      2.1 [+ or -] 0.9

            Blood ([micro]g/L)    Urine ([micro]g/L)

Group (n)          DMeAs                iAs

High (43)   13.2 [+ or -] 5.5 *   360 [+ or -] 173 *
Low (10)     2.6 [+ or -] 0.8      71 [+ or -] 13

                        Urine ([micro]g/L)

Group (n)         MMeAs                  DMeAs

High (43)   468 [+ or -] 240 *   1,559 [+ or -] 529 *
Low (10)     40 [+ or -] 22        152 [+ or -] 53

Group (n)   Hair ([micro]g/g)

High (43)   1.8 [+ or -] 0.8 *
Low (10)    0.4 [+o r -] 0.2

* Significantly different from the low-arsenic-exposure group,
p < 0.001.
Table 2. Comparison of serum LPO concentration, whole blood NPSH level,
and SOD activity between the high- and low-arsenic-exposed groups.

Group (n)     LPO ([micro]M)     NPSH ([micro]mol        SOD (NU/mL)
                   (a)            /g Hb) (a),(b)            blood)

High (43)   8.8 [+ or -] 1.8 *   4.3 [+ or -] 1.2 **   2,654 [+ or -]
                                                         400
Low (10)    7.1 [+ or -] 1.0     7.5 [+ or -] 0.5      2,830 [+ or -]
                                                         99

Abbreviations: Hb, hemoglobin; NU, nitrite unit. Values shown are
mean [+ or -] SD.

(a) Serum level of LPO in five samples and whole blood NPSH in one
sample could not be determined because of limited sample volume.

(b) Data from Pi et al. (30). Significantly different from the
low-arsenic-exposure group

* p < 0.05;

** p < 0.01


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Jingbo Pi, (1,2) Hiroshi Yamauchi, (3) Yoshito Kumagai, (4) Guifan Sun, (2) Takahiko Yoshida, (5) Hiroyuki Aikawa, (6) Claudia Hopenhayn-Rich, (7) and Nobuhiro Shimojo (4)

(1) Graduate School Doctoral Program in Medical Sciences, University of Tsukuba The current university was established in October, 1973. A forerunner of this university was Tokyo University of Education (東京教育大学 , Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan; (2) Department of Labor Hygiene and Occupational Health, School of Public Health, China Medical University, Shenyang, China; (3) Department of Preventive Medicine, St. Marianna University School of Medicine, Miyamae-ku, Kawasaki, Japan; (4) Department of Environmental Medicine, Institute of Community Medicine, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan; (5) Department of Hygiene, Asahikawa Medical University, Asahikawa, Hokkaido, Japan; (6) Department of Environmental Health, Tokai University School of Medicine, Boseidai, Isehara, Kanagawa, Japan; (7) Department of Preventive Medicine & Environmental Health, University of Kentucky Coordinates:  The University of Kentucky, also referred to as UK, is a public, co-educational university located in Lexington, Kentucky. , Lexington, Kentucky, USA

Address correspondence to Y. Kumagai, Department of Environmental Medicine, Institute of Community Medicine, University of Tsukuba, 1-1-1 Tennodai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8575, Japan. Telephone: +81-298-53-3297. Fax: +81-298-53-3039. E-mail: yk-em-tu@md.tsukuba.ac.jp

We thank H.X. Gao, Chifeng Epidemic Prevention Station, Inner Mongolia, China; G.J. Dai, Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, China Medical University; and H.Z. Ma, Endemic Diseases Prevention Institute of Inner Mongolia, China, for their excellent contribution to this work.

This work was supported in part by funding from the Japan-China Medical Association and Grant-in-Aid 1357029 (to Y. Kumagai) for scientific research from the Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture of Japan.

Received 23 April 2001; accepted 10 September 2001.
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